Britain’s energy time bomb
by Hamed Chapman
Foreign Secretary Jack Straw warned that Britain’s growing need for energy over the next decades has to be seen in a "changing context" due to declining production from the North Sea. Straw’s warning comes after the British Foreign Office identified energy security as being one of eight international priorities last December. The concern is that the country is no longer self-sufficient with oil and gas supplies from the UK's sector of the North Sea running out fast. The UK’s oil production has been in decline since production peaked at 2.8 mm bpd in 1999. Although the current output of 2.1 mm bpd is in line with the average of the past 20 years, it is predicted it could run dry within the next decade. According to the UK Offshore Operators` Association, the country will cease to be self-sufficient in 2007, production will drop to 1 mm bpd by 2010 and virtually end altogether five years later. In June, a parliamentary report expressed alarm about the delay in building up an infrastructure for imported supplies. It questioned whether the UK gas market had the ability to cover demand if there was severe weather over the next two or three winters. As part of the UK’s International Energy Strategy, Straw announced that he would be tasking British ambassadors "in priority posts overseas" to take personal charge of implementing and delivering its objectives. The energy time bomb also has important implications for Britain’s economy. Since North Sea production started in the late 1970s, oil has lubricated the economy with billions in tax revenues. Even during the decline since 2000, tax revenues have been worth some $ 900 mm, the equivalent to reducing income tax by some 10 %. Britain’s oil industry, which still directly employs 260,000 people, is already being consigned to the history books by the rapid withdrawal of international oil majors. Companies such as BP and Shell have been retreating from the North Sea for the last couple of years and plunging their investments elsewhere. Yet the offshore industry remains optimistic that many smaller specialist operators can continue to extract oil from mature fields. Source: IRNA Editorial NotesFirst published 30-10-04 by IRNA.com but couldn't link; reproduced on Alexanders Oil & Gas. -LJ Original article available here |
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